My eleven year old son is a keeper. He is very good at one on ones and part of his technique is to run out fast shouting 'Keeper's' like a banshee! I taught him this as when I was a keeper I was never pulled up for it by a ref. today the ref warned him when he did it that if he did it again he would penalise him - it does put some opponents off and to be honest and I can't deny that is the reason for doing it. I did think it might be a bit unsporting, but so is jumping around on your line for a penalty, but that is why I suggested he shouted keeper as you can claim it is habit to shout as you are coming out. So deep down I must have thought it might be illegal but I tried looking up this rule on google and can't find mention of it - I've told him to carry on doing it as this is the first ref who has pulled him up, but would be useful to understand the legality of the tactic if anybody knows? If there aren't defenders close by, can a keeper not shout 'Keeper's' as he is rushing out for the ball?
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I suppose the ref decided it was unsporting.
The law states that IN THE OPINION OF THE REFEREE he may be guilty of ungentlemanly conduct. So that can basically cover what your son is doing if the referee feels that what he is doing is 'ungentlemanly'.
Just as there is nothing written to say you can't say "leave it" or "my ball".
Leave it is another one that gets you pulled up at jr level
Seen mgrs, goalies , defenders all be reprimanded and in some instances indirect free kicks awarded
I once got threatened with a booking for having my shirt untucked. Some refs are just nauses - tell him to accept it and move on.
My son was fine about, but the tactic does work really well for him so would be a shame if more refs are going to pull him up. Had loads of refs before today who haven't though.
We've established that shouting in a deliberate attempt to put somebody off is ungentlemanly conduct.
Shouting to defenders "mine" or "keepers" when he's going for a cross, for example, is great. However, suggesting to your son that he should shout "keepers" to con the referee so that he can subsequently get away with ungentlemanly conduct is not appropriate.
It's none of my business, of course, but since you asked for opinions that's mine. If your son is talented that's good news for him. Encourage him to work hard, be honest and play fair. That way he'll be admired, liked and respected.
I asked if anybody knew the rules rather than for opinions - although it is interesting to discuss it - as I was genuinely unsure about it's legality. it seems it is down to the opinion of the ref. To date - countless refs have let it go and one has pulled it up - so i'll go with it being the opinion of one ref for the moment. If more pull him up - he will need to rethink of course.
The only generic one is 'keepers' but of a call is needed it needs to be your name or nickname. Unless your nickname is something like 'fuckface'
As a former defender, I have lost count how many times over a 20 year career I got away with telling an attacking opponent to 'leave it' or after finding out their name (which normally took 5 mins) and giving them a call of "backdoor john" when he was 1-on-1 with the last defender, for the opponent to knock it back to me. Only got caught out by the ref a couple of times.